Fe we eats i. 4 By MICHAEL : HOWLETT Herald Staff Writer The posalbility of a Kitimat-Terrace bus service operating on a . regular basis took one ‘more. step. towards becoming a reality last - night at an in-camera Postal. ‘security Criticized " OPTAWA (CP)The report "af Judge Rene Marin into cegalistic and insenstive by ostal security has been . witicized as incomplete, lean-Claude Parrot, head of he 23,000-member Canadian — _ Inton of Postal Workers, + Ina brief statement today, - Jarrot pingled out for par- leular criticlam Marin's ecommendation for further | ‘ge 0Oof =~ closed-circuit elevision cameras inside -oslal plants... He said the recom- _Rendation “appears to be sed om a personal pre- .onteived opinion rather aan on facts which were rought out in evidence ‘“efore the inquiry." The postal union advocates :ban on the cameras, known is electronic eyes, .on " prounds they are used not Sag OTTAWA, : . ‘mat for security reasons, but ‘® monitor job performance ind intimidate employees. NDP man _ protests (CP) Lorne: former New “Deniocrati(e” Party spokesman on the con- stitution, bas written all 10 premiers urging them to fake the initiative in re- opening constitutional talks by bolding a conference to hammer out compromises. Nystrom, who represented he NDP on the special JommonsSenate committee hat for three months studied ‘ime Minister Trudeau's wroposals to amend and vatriate the constitution, ‘ealgned as his party's con- ititutional spokesman fast. nonth when he decided he sould not endorse its support lor the package. He said in an interview “Tuesday night he wants both - the premiers and the federal ‘goverment to make con- cessions to get the talks rolling again but would not faborate other than to say the ball is in the provinces' court... z When ke mailed his letter March 2, after his resignation as constitutional spokesman, he was acting only as 4 backbeoch MP, ° - Nystrom sald. - Hesaid a copy of the letier was given to NDP Leader Ed Broadbent but he did not dis- cuss his plan with the party chief before mailing it. There is lots of time to ‘dhoowe a new formula once he constitution is patriated. meeting of the Terrace ‘and Kitimat Councils. and the Regional District of Kitimat-_ Stikine. « _ Although all resolutions tuken .must he referred back to the council concerned, a _ preliminary survey of “the feasibility af the bus servica appears to be on. the way. . ~. The ° raeeling, _ tended by almost all of: the representatives of . the concerned areas, __split‘on the issue of the -proposed Kitimat .— _, Valley Pravincial ate LEGISLATIVE i.LERA AY, l . PARLIAMENT WULLULNUS, ) qBWe14 Forest. ‘The division occured over who would foreat with half wanting . the forestry department and “half “the lands . department. The division ‘turns on . ability to remove lands ‘from the forest: for’ . - VICTORTA, B.C, 7 _ Terrace-Kitimat bus service closer to reality _ gol future industrial — development. . administrate the future - =: Also discussed, Was - the possible 9,000 foot northern runway ex- ~ tenaion at the Kitimat: - Terrace Alrport and the ' suitability of: landing equipment proposed for Part of aglant lig- saw puzzle being lowered Into place at Ocelot’s methanol plant out- side of Kitimat., Workers build Ocelot plant © By BECKY RAGLON - _ Herald SalfWriter —— Work Is continuing on schedule at the new Ocelot methanol plant. - gubside of Kitimat, with completion date slated for the second quarter in - 1982, : Partec-Lavalin, i ‘ contractors for the $150 - million Project currently have : “350 “workers on the siie and by completion . date ‘gould have up-to 600. “involved in building the. , Plant. “Coordinating construction is a little like putting a ‘jigsaw puzzle together,” said Tom Barras, a senior inspector tor Ocelot. Currently, a 225 ton | _ crane is on the site and . work is progressing -on the reformer furnace. Sewage lines’ and cooling pipes are also being laid for the complex and a pump. - hiuse will eventually be | ‘built to service the area.. ~ When the plant is in » Prince Charles warned of high LONEON (AP) — Prince Charles, who has fallen from his pew racehorse twice in five days, was urged Wed- nesday to slop risking his neck so he can walk down the | aisle in oné piece when be gets married July 20. - Newspapers called on Charles to quit and the British Safety Council warned that the 52-year-old wir to the throne is pushing is luck at a time of too many ig changes in his life. Council Director-General lames Tye said the warning vas based on a new U.S. Savy technique of assessing , 1 person’s risk potential rom the number of life- disturbing changes he or she faces. Charles, he conehided, is in for a tough time unless he takes it easy. : He cited the emotional strain of becoming engaged ta Lady Diana. Spencer, Planning the royal wedding, undergoing ‘heightened public scrutiny and now: throwing himself Into the new and hazardous sport of ateeplechasing. Lo The warning by the Safety Council, a privately funded ‘agency involved in im- proving industrial safety, came amid about whether the future king should take so many chiinces with hls wedding only four months away. ; But the prince — a qualified parachutist, fighter pilot, deepsea diver and lifelong horgeman — Is . apparently determined to qualify to ride as an amateur in the Grand National next year by competing In 15- races, He has ridden in four: so far, The staunchly monarchiat Daily Express urged the prince to give up his'‘perilous pastime,” It said in an editorial: “For his own good ond ours we would respectiully like to remonstrate with the Prince of Wales. We do not wish to spoil his fun: We merely want to ensure thit he goes unhurt to dhe altar in July and later on has a happy and prosperous reign. * ‘The New Standard's racing correspondent, Christopher Poole, said: “A more serious injury will inevitably follow if he per- sists. ” The Times noted that Charles needs mere training in the art of steeplechasing. “By sitting back rather than crouching forward, Prince Charies might not have come a cropper in either race." The Safety Council said it calculated that the prince _has notched 220 “life change full operation 1,200 tons -of methanol or the equivalent of 15 tank cars a day - will be produced.. Ocelot plans to ship the liquid, which is preduced. under “terrific heat and pressure” from the docking facilities they have also been working _ ob. risks units” — enough to give him an even chance of having an accident or falling sick, “He’s doing.exactly what he should not be doing — getting engaged, pursuing a new sport, changing his status and activities,” Tye said. The council warned last Friday that Charles was going to come a cropper only hours before he bloodied the royal nose falling off Good Prospect, his new horse, at the 18th fence ina race at Sandown Park southwest of London. Then be did it again In a race at Cheltenham in south- western = England. { . COMP. 77/73 ’ The future of Lakelie ° ’ Hot Springs was raised,. with a clear majority in access’ to any future: development. Kitimat — officially. notified Terrace of its desire’ to extend: its’. - boundaries to. Onion . By SECKY RAGLON, Herald Staff Writer Furlong: Bay ' Provincial, Park will be ready ‘for its — May 24 opening this year as park workers finish the . ' wiiter cleanup on schedule. Four-hundred -and fifteen. ' diseased‘ trees. have «been ~ removed from the park in ~ the pest. few months and culverts have been installed © for Improved. drainage int the : - ; Tionitered, tal zed, and ¢ core . . camping area: Eight parks workers were joined by 11 People from the correctional centre this week! as underbrush: was- cleared | we and burned ‘and firewood : chopped. - Park officials ° : removed from ‘the park, a _ number which was reduced a Maite EE, after. a review of | the Situation last fall by. Kitimat- : ‘Strikine ~ Regional. ‘District ‘tembers. . 2) The’ ‘trees. ‘which’ “were removed suffered from root favor of assuring public: _ “had - originally anticipated that °- 1,300 trees would haye to be° ROTTEN TO THE CORE “ai, a formality in its re-application to the - ministry: of muni¢lpal affairs ‘for extension ’.” ratification. A final item cavered, was that of bringing the Regional Resource Map | up.to date: A resolution’ - was paitsed t to include o on Workers clean r . rot and. a collection of ‘other: ; digenses: which “result: from . ‘groind seepage and old | age. Problems, caused by’ the. . \ normally wet ground in the area: aggrevated by the” “ byking eff tof the roads in the park's , says one. ot ficial: * Ls. The trea! removal is thie result of a year project | in which. each! of the park's. 4,000 ‘treeby has”. been: samples takei rom them to’ determine whee eror.not the. ‘Gordéni Macibonald, district - manager forjhe ministry, of lands, § a and housing. He: removal’ will be a “smaller - program.” — * “we'll monitor’ ‘the tees | over a” ‘period, of years 3 and. then go back and se¢ if there . , through a Public; auction. are any signs of decay’ " * te map te prope Kitimat: Councils have 0 4: * been meeting’ for four: : years on'g-two to three.” : . Unies as.year basis. - _ Another. meeting ’ “Wo . 2 four’ inooths, a removed | aa ‘that have a lédn towards ae Taeapure’ - campaite or #target,” . said’ Kitimat’ ‘fexry foute, : "The. Terrace © “and : "planned to take place ii- Each ‘hee in. the’ ‘park baw been charted, ax to'its type, . oars size , description and possible os ‘failure crating, |. Failure: . - rating. ts! ‘determined. iby. a; long’. ‘pencil-sized’, core, sample taken from: each : ee Se tedssfering tram “Foot -rot. are. completely: * - a -bollew, others can shatter on impact wher they fall, While ‘there. has\.not been any : ‘reported incidents of falling . trees harming campers or: “damaging camp property at fhe park, the trees have been : a. safety: ; according: to, “Wherever you get big, big’, trees,"* sald: MacDonald, :“yoit- will. find “programs . ‘similar to this one. Trees at the _Exchamsiks campsite - have also been drilled and “ ™ monitered- and. three trees. were removed this year. “Timber "reclaimed ‘from _. “the project . went. on sale: Chris Barratt of Parks Construction could almost’ have dropped this cottonwood from the Inside-out. 7 ~ Jolliffe looses -Case Terrace alderman Vi¢ Jollifte has been ordered to - pay a former’ member of the national ski team $7,500 in : damages for slander but ‘Jolliffe is making no com- ments until he hears from his lawyer, Michael Andrew Johnson, ‘former operator of a ski resort and now owner of a eki equipment business, claimed Jolliffe made defamatory remarks about him during a protracted personal dispute during the mid-1970s. , B.C. Supreme Court was told, that. Jolliffe gave a suggestive birthday card to Johnson's wife, Gall, in - November, £976, Johnson confronted Jolliffe in front of Jolliffe's wife, and, holding Jolliffe by the neck, sald he wouldn'} tolerate such conduct. “It's war, it’s total war,” Jolliffe replied. ‘I'm going underground for you.” Mr. Justice D: E. Andrews sald thereafter Jolllife made remarks about Johnson to several prominent persona in Terrace, including municipal coun il members. “Complete Office Coffee Service” . 300dhost 638-1825. » 4928 Hwy. 16W. TERRACE Open Pn har ee ee og ER ee Westend Food Mart. * g:30am-Fipm 635- 5274 tend Westend Rs Ss 635- 7228 7 days a week Service |. = We Satisty Tum aye yank ; Nat DAY SA YEAR” — ay 1 sepia: Led